2005-2014

5 January 2005

Pakistani journalists visit Indian colleagues for conference

A meeting in India has attracted a large delegation of Pakistani journalists, with the aim of promoting more contact and cooperation with their Indian colleagues. The press clubs of Chandigarh, India, and Lahore, Pakistan, organized the conference, scheduled to begin January 6. About 70 Pakistani journalists made the trip Chandigarh, the Press Trust of India (PTI) reported. Ramesh Vinayak...

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4 January 2005

No good guys for Darfur

Paris Hilton gets more press in the New York Times than the humanitarian crisis in Darfur. This is according to Matt Thompson, a reporter working for the Poynter Journalism Institute, who reports that a search of the Lexis-Nexus news database shows that between May and June this year the New York Times gave about 10 000 words to stories that mentioned Darfur and "at least 17 000 words to stories...

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2 January 2005

Attacks on the Press 2004: CPJ Report

In a stunning upset, India's voters surprised the media and the world by rejecting the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and its Hindu nationalism in favor of the secular Indian National Congress party in general elections in May. However, despite the general disavowal of extremism at the polls, ethnic and religious tensions persisted in the world's largest democracy, posing onerous threats to...

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1 January 2005

CPJ's country report 2004

The world witnessed a series of democratic milestones in postwar Afghanistan in 2004, from a newly ratified constitution in January to the first direct presidential election in October. Conditions for the blossoming Afghan press improved in many areas, with a significant expansion of news media outlets and fortified constitutional protections for freedom of expression and the press. Yet...

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1 January 2005

Let’s Blame the Readers

What do the managing editors of America’s newspapers talk about when they get together? Readers, and why there are fewer of them than there used to be. At the Associated Press Managing Editors convention in Louisville this fall, Topic A was declining readership. Stuart Wilk, the past APME president and associate editor of The Dallas Morning News, delivered a keynote speech that spoke of various...

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28 December 2004

The Maharashtrian farmer will be a core TG for Sakal in 2005

The Pune-headquartered Sakal Group of Newspapers, which publishes Sakal, Gomantak, The Maharashtra Herald and Gomantak Times, believes that catering to "focused needs" is where the future really lies for the publisher. The rural farming community in Maharashtra is one such focused group that the newspaper house would like to target. In the next six months, the company will launch a 16-page...

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23 December 2004

Opera Tackles Voice Browsing and RSS in Latest Beta Release

Opera Software ASA unveiled Thursday a beta test version of its next Web browser release that features speech recognition, discovery of news feeds and automatic Web-page resizing. While the next release had been on track to be Version 7.60, the Oslo, Norway, company announced a change in plans. It is retooling the version to be more than an update, which will include a yet-to-be-determined name...

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22 December 2004

EU funds new HIV/AIDS reporting project in India

The European Union is sponsoring a new project aimed at improving news coverage of HIV and AIDS in India. The U.K.-based Thomson Foundation is organizing the project, set to begin in the first half of 2005. The new project offers training to improve the skills of print, radio and television journalists, while raising the quality of their coverage of critical issues. Thomson says its trainers will...

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21 December 2004

Bloggers, Citizen Media and Rather's Fall -- Little People Rise Up in 2004

There's something inherently fun about playing God. How else to explain the popularity of the third-person "God games" that have ruled the videogame charts? And when I got my two-year-old son the Little People farm scene and garage, he would play for hours, choosing the fates of those cute little plastic figures. For way too long, it has been the mainstream media (MSM) that's played God with the...

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20 December 2004

O'Reilly seeks to buy into Hindi newspaper group

Independent News & Media, the publishing empire headed by Irish businessman Tony O'Reilly, is trying to buy a stake in one of India's leading newspaper groups. The owner of the Independent and Independent on Sunday newspapers, along with the Belfast Telegraph, is in talks with the family that owns Jagran - which publishes the world's most widely read Hindi newspaper, the Dainik Jagran, as well as...

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